The basin was sold out for three full days and it is a shame that a piece of bad luck stopped it from being a closer contest.I think if Voges had been out and Marsh had come out in the morning at 147/4 with the NZ bowlers reasonably bouyant, there would be a reasonable prospect of keeping the lead to 100-120.
I think the end result would still be an Australian win, but probably by 6 wickets.
Yes, but one would think an inch behind wouldn't be called by a good umpire. It's as much as the width of the actual line on the ground.doug chooses to push the envelope and opens himself up to bad luck.
Sodhi just took a 7 wicket bag against Otago so yeah, confidence definitely high.Changes unlikely for Black Caps as Ross Taylor loses race to play second test | Stuff.co.nz
Changes unlikely for the 2nd Test, according to this report.
4 tests against Australia this summer and still we persist in picking erstwhile batsman and part-time spinner Mark Craig. I'd like to see some attacking and aggressive captaincy vis a vis selections and not just keep playing a guy who is cooked. Young legspinner Ish Sodhi must be high on confidence after his man of the match performance in the last ODI of the Chappell Hadlee series......what the hell would we have to lose by playing him??? Doug Bracewell will also apparently get another trundle over the 'aggressive' Wags and the sensational Henry.
What is the batting coach Craig McMillan doing? BJ Watling averages 17.5 from his last 6 tests, Latham's game is not improving, guys are chasing wides like it's a one-dayer....even KW is playing uncharacteristic shots. This is a humiliation....how the hell would we have gone against an attack of Starc, Pattinson, Hazelwood & Lyon(?)
You earn the right to be aggressive by seeing off the new ball, building partnerships, wearing down the bowlers. All the things these BC's don't do. They don't respect the game and they don't respect test cricket. Trying to bat in a test like you are playing ODI cricket won't work...the opposition simply knuckle down & outlast you. This is cricket on steroids, doomed to fail.
There is a huge chasm between beating up on below par sub-continental teams on flat tracks and matching it with this goodish Australian team. We are nowhere near as good as we had thought we were. This summer has proven it. This summer, against tough opposition, has shown that out approach to the game has been hopelessly naïve & undeserving of success. We don't adapt the way the Australian's do. We are straight-jacketed by frankly dumb thinking about how we should play our cricket.
That went from 0-100 real quickChanges unlikely for Black Caps as Ross Taylor loses race to play second test | Stuff.co.nz
Changes unlikely for the 2nd Test, according to this report.
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We are straight-jacketed by frankly dumb thinking about how we should play our cricket.
NZ had their fair share of luck, Burns strangled down leg early, a few NZ batsmen were dropped. Couple of LBWs awarded in our favour that would have been umpires call had the initially decision gone against us.Kiwiviktor is wrong. Cricket is not a game of skill it is a game of skill and luck. You need both on your side.
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I don't think the margin of victory accurately represented the difference in the standard of cricket on display from each team, so in the most encompassing sense NZ were more unlucky than they were lucky. In no world did they play anywhere near as well as Australia did though and that has be well and truly recognised before pointing to luck factors.NZ had their fair share of luck, Burns strangled down leg early, a few NZ batsmen were dropped. Couple of LBWs awarded in our favour that would have been umpires call had the initially decision gone against us.
Voges wicket (just like Lyon in Adelaide) has been overplayed because we weren't good enough to put either of them behind us and make our own luck again.
We're very selective in pointing out the supposed bad luck we have, yet conveniently fail to point out when we gets things going our way.
See I do think the innings margin was indicative of the skill levels on displayed, especially the concentration levels with both bat and ball, Australia were well ahead in both disciplines. Perhaps the one area I didn't defend NZ more on which did of course set them on the back-foot from the get-go was losing the toss. However given how poor, loose and irresponsible some the shot selection was, I'm not they deserve so much sympathy for that either.I don't think the margin of victory accurately represented the difference in the standard of cricket on display from each team, so in the most encompassing sense NZ were more unlucky than they were lucky. In no world did they play anywhere near as well as Australia did though and that has be well and truly recognised before pointing to luck factors.
Agree & as I said before, I'm almost certain he wouldn't make it in Sheffield Shield cricket if he was Australian.I think I'm done with Bracewell as a test bowler, just doesn't have enough going for him to be a threat at that level. Shame really because young Doug was a top notch prospect.
It could be there's a few going around who may be worse (who won't last long at that level) , but I couldn't see Bracewell playing top class Sheffield Shield cricket for any decent period of time. The guy averages mid 30s in NZ FC cricket, an environment in which even decent pace bowlers generally average sub 30, and since his Hobart heroics he's averages over 40 in test cricket.There are definitely worse bowlers in the Shield than Bracewell ftr. Whether that's more to do with Bracewell receiving world class coaching and infrastructure than it is him being more talented or driven is hard to say I suppose, but I reckon you're wrong.